Just to name a few: His clothesline on Kobe Bryant, his hard fould on Manu Ginobli (that may or may not have been a flop), his numerous elbows at opposing players faces, or the nightly trash talking routine.

I would consider Raja Bell a dirty player because he lets his emotions allow him to go after a player in a venerable situation.

Combine the two and you have a duo that will go toe to toe with any player on any occasion. I mean, when you are amped up on as much adrenaline as Kevin Garnett is every single night, I find it hard to believe that you have any control over yourself.

I've been in situations where adrenaline runs high, but not anything near the levels that Garnett is at every single night.

So when you throw in Paul Pierces willingness to talk trash and Kevin Garnett's willingness to find a fight, any fight.

Matt Barnes

I wouldn't be surprised if Matt Barnes has been involved in 20 fights throughout his career, maybe the majority of those fights would be petty or insignificant, but still they would count as a scuffle.

Kenyon Martin/ JR Smith/ Birdman

Actually, I'm surprised that this trio doesn't get into more fights than they already do.

Just look at em'. I don't mean to judge a book by it's cover, but when you are coated in tattoo's, had multiple run in's with law enforcement, and you act like a teenager on the floor, I find it hard to believe you are actually there to play basketball.

But I give them credit, they have shown restraint in the past, but they aren't perfect.

The video I show you is just one of many that were available. I wish I were able to present multiple videos, but that just isn't the case.

Lamar Odom

From all the players that I can think of off the top of my head, incidents involving Lamar Odom come to mind more often than any other player in the league.

Whether it's the incident where he tackles Ray Allen after getting his shot blocked (straight up speared him), his numerous run in's with the Portland Trail Blazers, or going to toe with Jermaine O'Neal.

It only takes on incident, one moment for an emotionally unstable person to snap. Maybe it's a game that hasn't gone to Delonte's preference and he just goes off.

It can happen to any NBA player, but when you add in a past history of being fairly unstable, I am sure you run a higher risk of becoming a threat and you are most definitely more prone to violent outbursts than others.